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Assembly language
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==Notes== {{Reflist|group="nb"|refs= <ref group="nb" name="NB1">AMD manufactured second-source Intel 8086, 8088, and 80286 CPUs, and perhaps 8080A and 8085A CPUs, under license from Intel, but starting with the 80386, Intel refused to share their x86 CPU designs with anyone—AMD sued about this for breach of contract—and AMD designed, made, and sold 32-bit and 64-bit x86-family CPUs without Intel's help or endorsement.</ref> <ref group="nb" name="NB3">This is one of two redundant forms of this instruction that operate identically. The 8086 and several other CPUs from the late 1970s/early 1980s have redundancies in their instruction sets, because it was simpler for engineers to design these CPUs (to fit on silicon chips of limited sizes) with the redundant codes than to eliminate them (see [[don't-care term]]s). Each assembler will typically generate only one of two or more redundant instruction encodings, but a ''disassembler'' will usually recognize any of them.</ref> <ref group="nb" name="NB4">In 7070 Autocoder, a macro definition is a 7070 macro generator program that the assembler calls; Autocoder provides special macros for macro generators to use.</ref> }}
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